Aging of U.S. Population Will Swell Ranks of Elderly Drivers

With the aging of the U.S. population, the number of elderly drivers is projected to double in the next three decades. People 65 and up will make up one-fifth of the nation’s drivers in just 15 years, which could make driving even more of an adventure than it is today.

But experts at a two-day forum on aging drivers, hosted by the National Transportation Safety Board, said it’s hard to predict the impact on traffic safety, according to The Washington Post.

Often living in communities where a car is the only way to get around, elderly people are driving more than in generations past–which could be positive, since ”drivers who drive a lot tend to have fewer crashes than those who don’t,” said Ann M. Dellinger of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Officials discussed measures that help protect older drivers,  such as states requiring vision tests and banning license renewal by mail. Two states, Illinois and New Hampshire, require road tests for all drivers 75 and older.

Others suggested further advances to cars and roadways, such as larger warning signs and inflatable seat-belts, which make surviving an accident more likely.

Elderly drivers are involved in a disproportionate number of auto fatalities, but the discussion came against a backdrop of declining numbers of fatal crashes, especially among the old. The number of traffic deaths has dropped by more than half in recent years for drivers 80 years and older.

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